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Gallipoli Campaign

Gallipoli Campaign. Allies wanted to take the Dardanelles Straits from the Ottoman Empire. British & French lost nearly 200,000 men. Gallipoli was a failure. Troops from Australia & New Zealand played an important role. Arab Revolt. Arabian Peninsula rebelled against

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Gallipoli Campaign

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  1. Gallipoli Campaign • Allies wanted to take the Dardanelles Straits from the Ottoman Empire. • British & French lost nearly 200,000 men. • Gallipoli was a failure Troops from Australia & New Zealand played an important role

  2. Arab Revolt • Arabian Peninsula rebelled against the Ottoman Empire. • British sent TE Lawrence to support the Arabs. • Arabs overthrew Ottoman rule.

  3. Armenian Massacre • Russia launched an attack on the Caucasus Mountains • Ottomans claimed Armenian Christians were aiding the Russians • Ottomans began to forcibly remove & kill Armenians from the area. • More than 600,000 died. Ottoman leaders were accused of genocide.

  4. Genocide • Deliberate destruction of a racial, ethnic, political or cultural group

  5. World War I involved many current and former European colonies. • The Allies overran German colonies in Africa and Asia. • Colonial recruits from British India and French West Africa fought in Europe. • Canada, Australia, and New Zealand sent troops to support Britain. Many people in the colonies hoped that their loyal service would help them win independence after the war.

  6. Japan declared war on Germany in 1914 • Japan captured German colonies in China & the Pacific

  7. Today-Objective: The War Ends

  8. Objectives • Describe how World War I became a total war. • Explain the effect that years of warfare had on morale. • Analyze the causes and effects of American entry into the war. • Summarize events that led to the end of the war. • Understand the impact of the Paris Peace talks

  9. How did the Allies win World War I? When Russia exited the war, Germany gained ground against the Allies because the Germans were no longer fighting on two fronts. Once the Americans joined on the side of the Allies, however, the Allies were able to reverse the German gains and then push the Germans back out of France and Belgium. The German generals told their government that they could not win.

  10. The nations involved in World War I needed to commit to a strategy of total war to support a modern mechanized war. Governments responded by • Imposing universal military conscription • Setting up systems to arm, transport, and supply armies • Raising taxes and borrowing money • Rationing food and other products • Setting prices and forbidding strikes

  11. Both sides in the conflict waged a propaganda war. • They urged civilians to enlist or to loan money to the government. • They played upatrocities committed by the enemy. • They censored the press and the arts to keep bad war news from the public.

  12. Total war meant that women had to take over the jobs of men who left to serve in the military. • War industries • Manufacturing • Nursing • Farming • Armed forces Women worked in Their work helped convince the United States, Germany, and Britain to give women the vote.

  13. In Russia, protests set off a revolution that brought down the monarchy. Early in 1918, Russia’s new leader signed a treaty with Germany that withdrew Russia from the war. In 1917, as morale fell, soldiers from many countries began to mutiny or revolt, and civilians called for peace. Russia’s withdrawal meant that Germany needed to fight only on the Western Front.

  14. A German U-boat torpedoed and sank the British passenger ship Lusitaniain May 1915. Almost 1,200 passengers were killed, including 128 Americans. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson threatened to cut off diplomatic relations with Germany. Germany agreed to warn passenger ships, ending submarine warfare for the moment.

  15. International law permitted wartime blockades to confiscate contraband, but not items such as food. Britain’s navy blocked ships from carrying any goods to Germany, and many Germans went hungry. In 1915, Germany said it would use U-boats to sink all ships carrying goods to Britain.

  16. Before Germany could strike a decisive blow, the United States joined the war. • Cultural ties between the United States and the Allies were strong. • Germany resumed U-boat attacks in early 1917. • In 1917, the Zimmerman note proved Germany was trying to rally Mexico against the United States. Ships sunk by U-boats, May 1917–Jan. 1918

  17. German Provocation • Zimmermann Note • Germans promised to support Mexico if war broke out. • U-boats sink 4 unarmed American merchant ships.

  18. In April 1917, President Wilson asked the United States Congress to declare war on Germany. • Still, the United States needed months to recruit, train, supply, and transport troops. • Before the Americans arrived, Germany made one last big push on the Western Front. • Germany pushed the Allies back 40 miles, but the offensive exhausted German troops. • By 1918, two million U.S. soldiers had joined the fighting on the Western Front and helped reverse any gains the Germans had achieved.

  19. Americans in the Trenches

  20. American involvement was a turning point for the Allies. • Although relatively few American troops fought, their arrival boosted Allied morale. • German generals told William II that the war could not be won. He fled to the Netherlands. • Austria-Hungary collapsed. Bulgaria and the Ottoman empire also asked for peace. The new German government sought an armistice, and the Great War officially ended on November 11, 1918

  21. 11 a.m., November 11, 1918 The Armistice is Signed!

  22. Even before the war ended, Wilson had outlined a plan for a lasting peace. Hoping to resolve World War I and all future wars, Wilson urged adoption of his Fourteen Points. Wilson’s Fourteen Points included • Freedom of the seas • Free trade • Arms reductions • An end to secret treaties • Self-determination for Eastern Europe • An association of nations to keep the peace

  23. World War I was devastating for all of the nations involved. More than 8.5 million men died and more than 16 million were wounded fighting in the war. Many of the wounded were disabled for life. Six to thirteen million civilians also died. Many others became refugees. A World War I cemetery in Belgium

  24. The influenza pandemic of 1918 added to the devastation, killing 20 million people worldwide.

  25. Political radicals dreamed of instituting new social and political systems, including bolshevism (communism). The governments in Russia, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman empire had collapsed under the stresses of war. Colonial troops hoped for independence for their occupied countries.

  26. British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, and U.S. President Woodrow Wilsonmet at the Paris Peace Conference after the war ended. The victorious Allied leaders (along with Italy’s Vittorio Orlando) were known as the “Big Four.” Lloyd George, Clemenceau, & Wilson Often made decisions apart from Orlando Essentially being the Big Three

  27. The Central Powers and Russia were not allowed to take part in the negotiations at the conference. The Paris Peace Talks The Big Four met with the leaders of the other Allied countries to discuss the fate of Europe, the former Ottoman empire, and various colonies.

  28. Goals of the Allies at the Paris Peace Conference

  29. In June 1919, the Allies forced Germany to sign the Treaty of Versailles.

  30. The Allies drew up separate treaties with the other Central Powers and redrew the map of Europe. • The Allies applied the principle of self-determination to former German, Russian, and Austrian lands in Eastern Europe. • New nations were created, including Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, and Yugoslavia. • self-determination – the right of people to choose their own form of government

  31. 1914 1920

  32. The treaties did not apply self-determination to European colonies in Asia and Africa. • Instead, former German and Ottoman lands became mandates administered by Western powers. • In theory, the mandates were to be held until they were ready to stand alone. • In practice, they were treated as colonies.

  33. Territorial changes in Southwest Asia after the Great War

  34. Many of President Wilson’s Fourteen Points were not implemented in the treaties. Germany, the other Central Powers, and other countries and colonies were angered by their treatment. German resentment of the Treaty of Versailles would later spark World War II.

  35. Wilson did succeed in establishing the League of Nations, a group of more than 40 countries formed to negotiate disputes in an effort to avoid future wars. The United States never joined the League of Nations. Although it promised collective security, the League proved ineffective in preventing future wars. Because of opposition to the League, the United States Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. • collective security – a system in which a group of nations acts as one to preserve the peace of all

  36. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge The League of Nations • The United States Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, making it invalid in the United States. • The largest obstacle faced in the ratification of the Treaty of Versailles was the opposition of Henry Cabot Lodge who argued that participation in the League would drag the United States into future European wars. • In refusing to join, the United States weakened the League of Nations before it had even begun.

  37. League of Nations Members

  38. Results of the Treaty of Versailles • Germany was horrified and furious over the terms of the treaty. • Italy had hoped to gain more land than it had received. The agreements that were made with Allies upon Italy joining them were left unfulfilled. • Japan was angry because the Allies did not recognize its claims in China. • China was angry that Japan had been given control of former German possessions in China. • Russia was angry over the reestablishment of Poland and the creation of independent Estonia, Finland, Latvia, and Lithuania on lands that had been part of the Russian Empire.

  39. World War I Casualties

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